An all-Iowa problem, requiring All-Iowa solutions
What makes cancer unique among the many issues, obstacles, and crises Iowans face on any given day is its impartiality. Cancer isn’t restricted by any socioeconomic or demographic factors. It doesn’t care about your education, your bank account, or your zip code. It’s not bothered by your age, who you voted for, or what you do for work.
Cancer is a menace that touches us all in one way or another. By now, we all know the stats – second highest rate in the country, only growing rate. It’s an all-Iowa problem that requires an all-Iowa solution. And it will get even worse if we fail, right now, to meet this moment.
Channel every person you know whom cancer has impacted as you consider how best to tackle this crisis that has been building for decades. We can focus on three separate, but essential, areas: prevention, treatment, and research.
To help prevent cancer, we must address risk factors. The Legislature can take some concrete steps to lower exposure risk going forward.
We can better regulate the use of tanning beds in Iowa. UnityPoint Health reports that using tanning beds before age 35 increases your risk of developing malignant melanoma by 75%. There is a bill up for consideration in the Senate that would require parental approval for anyone under the age of 18 to use a tanning bed.
We can work to disincentivize vaping and tobacco use, especially by young people, to combat rising lung cancer rates.
We can do much more with radon detection and mitigation around the state.
When it comes to treatment, we couldn’t find ourselves at a better moment in history. Scientific advances make patient care more manageable every year. Hospitals like UIHC employ some of the best and brightest medical minds in the world. But in order to reach every corner of the state, from urban to rural, we need a renewed focus on bringing in and retaining new waves of skilled nurses, doctors, and medical professionals who see our state as a worthwhile destination to practice. We must invest in an Iowa that values education; an Iowa in which medical students, residents, and practitioners alike want to build a future for themselves and their families. We have to make childcare more accessible, housing more affordable, and lower costs to make it easier to build a comfortable life in Iowa.
Finally, we must invest in cancer research here at home. We can’t continue to rely solely on fickle and fluctuating federal NIH grants. We have to build our own research funding pipeline. The Holden Cancer Center is the gold standard for scientific research in Iowa, and its work benefits the whole state. Last year, $1 million was allocated to cancer research funding. While our researchers in Iowa City put the money to good use, it was a drop in the bucket. This step is precarious and will require patience. The state budget is a mess and digging ourselves out of the hole won’t happen overnight. But I think Iowans would take cancer research funding over a corporate tax giveaway any day.
None of this will be easy. Nothing cancer-related ever is. But we can’t continue down this path while Iowans of every stripe suffer needlessly. Let’s make “the wave” at every Hawkeye football game mean something concrete for our future: by taking action now, future generations can look back with pride that Iowans rose as one to wave goodbye to cancer for good.
——-
Janice Weiner, a Democrat from Iowa City,
is the Iowa Senate minority leader.
